Gleaton, Antony

Of the more than ten million Africans brought to the Americas as slaves, only six percent were taken to the territory now known as the United States, with the rest being taken to the Caribbean, Mexico, and Central and South America. These estimates might come as a surprise to many, and beg the question that given these numbers, why are blacks in the U.S. at the center of racial consciousness in the Americas to the extent of appropriating the term 'African American' only for residents of the U.S.?

One answer is that the United States is the most powerful and developed nation in the Americas, and the consciousness of blacks in the U.S. has created a well-defined movement and led to changes in laws and legislation. That racism continues to be a cultural and social struggle in the U.S. with ongoing progress and failure helps to overshadow race relations in the rest of the Americas. Another answer is that after five hundred years of nation building, culture, language, and national borders have prevented any unified black consciousness from developing in Mexico, Central and South America, and in some instances the legacy of Africa is all but invisible from the cultural dialogue.

In many countries in Latin America the cultural dialogue revolves around class, but most often the reality is that the darker one's skin, the lower one's social status. With these issues, ideologies, and contradictions as a backdrop Tony Gleaton's portraits serve to illuminate political issues of black consciousness in the Americas and at the same time express motivations that are highly personal and closely held.

Gleaton's ancestry is African and European, and with fair skin and hazel green eyes he could fit a variety of ethnic descriptions. Born in Detroit and growing up in Los Angeles in the 1950s as an African American who didn't always fit in, he easily gravitated to investigating how black people can become forgotten when they don't fit into neat historical categories.

In one of his earliest bodies of work titled Cowboys, Reconstructing an American Myth, Gleaton made photographs and portraits of Mexican, African American, Native American, and European American cowboys. This body of work challenges a widely held vision of the United States' pioneering roots with portraits that are as carefully crafted as they are culturally revealing. In the process of working on this series Gleaton was introduced to Mexican rodeo and began traveling to and from Mexico with a group of charros (Mexican rodeo performers) from Los Angeles. Sharing an apartment with a stunt man from Churubusco Studios in Mexico City from 1982 to 1988 began a seven-year period of extensive travels in Mexico.

Two years later Gleaton established a household with the Yarahumara Indians of Northern Mexico where he began making portraits of the present day descendants of African slaves brought to what was then New Spain in the 1500s, 1600s, and 1700s. In these portraits which resulted in the exhibition Africa's Legacy in Mexico, which was extensively exhibited by the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service in the U.S. and in Mexico and Cuba by the Mexican National Council for Culture and the Arts, Gleaton had developed a style that would allow him to explore issues of cultural identity and present his own personal descriptions of beauty, family, and goodness. <Gleaton continued to expand this project into Central and South America until he had logged over 50,000 miles on the ground to produce the work for this catalogue and exhibition. While Gleaton has expanded the territory of his work geographically from the American West to the fringes of the Amazon Basin, he has also crossed borders that have separated documentary and directorial approaches to photography.

Regardless of the craft and care that Gleaton brings to his portraits, the basic documentary information in his work can be linked easily to some of the work Adrian Piper has produced in a directorial mode that explores the tension experienced by people who are not easily defined by rigid categories of race, gender, and class. In many of his portraits Gleaton strives to present his subjects as the epitome of beauty and grace. The best of these pictures achieve that goal in the same way that some of Lorna Simpson's work insists that universal expressions of sensuality and beauty be represented though images of people of color.

Since the invention of photography the portrait has been the medium's most ubiquitous form. Our interest in how we look and how we look at others has survived from the daguerreotype to the digital image. Gleaton's work fits squarely into that tradition. Using a medium format camera, his portraits combine the clarity found in the work of Walker Evans, the long subtle range of tone that Roy DeCarava mastered in his photographs, and the unflinching eye contact and connecting spirit that informs the work of Fazal Sheikh.

In the work in this catalogue and exhibition, Gleaton is not just providing us with photographic evidence of Africa's legacy, he is making that evidence a partner to his own personal desire of 'crafting an alternative iconography of what beauty, and family, and love, and goodness might stand for--one that is inclusive not exclusive.'

Gleaton presents his work in the style of pre-postmodern art photography. His prints are expertly crafted to extend the gray scale to its limits allowing all possible shades from black to white to be completely revealed. His prints are presented in traditional white mats in sizes ranging from 8 x 10"" to 16 x 20,"" which by today's standards seem quiet and quaint. Although his work seems to live in the past it has an urgency informed by identity politics that makes it contemporary. Many academics and scholars would like us to think that identity politics are over and done with, but current events remind us that we make assumptions and judgements and take actions against individuals based on what they look like all the time.

In producing this body of work, Gleaton didn't start out to explore specific kinds of questions about race and representation, nor did he want his work to be just elegantly crafted portraits of ethnographic study. In order to accomplish this task Gleaton walked a fine line between motivation and manipulation. His motivation was to connect with individuals with whom he shared a common story and to celebrate that bond with images of beauty and grace. To make these kinds of pictures in places where life is often hard would require a selective eye focused on his own point of view.

While Gleaton doesn't ignore that the people in his photographs appear at times to be living in circumstances less privileged than his own, he doesn't make a point of it either, because that would be a different story to tell. His story is about making connections of the human spirit based on a shared history. In every one of his pictures the feeling of connection between subject and photographer is so fully realized, so intimate and expressive that we cannot escape how powerfully Gleaton has embraced this bond.

If you saw only a few of Gleaton's photographs at one time it might be harder to recognize the bond between photographer and subject. It might be especially lost in the portraits of children, who respond to suggestions and direction more readily than adults. When making his portraits, Gleaton gives direction so that certain gestures and expressions of intimacy might only exist in the moment the shutter is released. By understanding and encouraging these moments Gleaton creates a consistency of adoration and respect throughout portraits made in many countries, cultures, and circumstances. Gleaton is not looking for a document of life. He has engaged in a process of call and response that began in Detroit and found its way through the Americas, calling out with a singular voice and hoping for a chorus in response.

Jeffrey Hoone, Director 2002

This project was made possible with the support of Light Work's Endowment Fund for Mid-Career Artists.

No one seems to be in a hurry in Tony Gleaton's photographs. There are no frenetic gestures or moments of uncomfortable tension. His photographs look like he has made the air stand still under a quiet blanket of brilliant moisture, and that his subjects have paused in the refreshment. This atmosphere of connection is a deliberate and passionate gaze that travels in a circle from subject to photographer.

Over the past several years Gleaton has been committed to exploring 'every nuance of African influence in the Americas.' With confidence that matches the ambition of this goal, his aim is to 'make my own culture look beautiful...and in doing that, I become beautiful.' In pursuit of this goal, Gleaton has documented black cowboys in the American West, fisherman in Guatemala and the daily life of residents in remote villages in Mexico. To find graceful and spirited connections in such uncommon places confirmed the importance of his efforts and renewed his urgency to bring the work to a wider audience.

In a recent exhibition at the Watts Tower Art Center in Los Angeles, his series titled Black Mexico, The African Legacy, helped highlight common bonds within the Watts community that is rapidly changing from predominately Black to mostly Latino. By celebrating and acknowledging the influence of people who are separated from any dominant group Tony Gleaton is able to locate common affinities that bind us together in the human condition. Like a mirror that shines back at us with unflinching resolve, Gleaton clearly acknowledges that the integrity of any culture is reflected in the identity of every individual.

Tony Gleaton lives in Los Angeles, CA and participated in Light Work's Artist-in-Residence program from August 15 - September 15, 1991.

Jeffrey Hoone (c)1992

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Of the more than ten million Africans brought to the Americas as slaves, only six percent were taken to the territory now known as the United States, with the rest being taken to the Caribbean, Mexico, and Central and South America. These estimates might come as a surprise to many, and beg the question that given these numbers, why are blacks in the U.S. at the center of racial consciousness in the Americas to the extent of appropriating the term 'African American' only for residents of the U.S.?

One answer is that the United States is the most powerful and developed nation in the Americas, and the consciousness of blacks in the U.S. has created a well-defined movement and led to changes in laws and legislation. That racism continues to be a cultural and social struggle in the U.S. with ongoing progress and failure helps to overshadow race relations in the rest of the Americas. Another answer is that after five hundred years of nation building, culture, language, and national borders have prevented any unified black consciousness from developing in Mexico, Central and South America, and in some instances the legacy of Africa is all but invisible from the cultural dialogue.

In many countries in Latin America the cultural dialogue revolves around class, but most often the reality is that the darker one's skin, the lower one's social status. With these issues, ideologies, and contradictions as a backdrop Tony Gleaton's portraits serve to illuminate political issues of black consciousness in the Americas and at the same time express motivations that are highly personal and closely held.

Gleaton's ancestry is African and European, and with fair skin and hazel green eyes he could fit a variety of ethnic descriptions. Born in Detroit and growing up in Los Angeles in the 1950s as an African American who didn't always fit in, he easily gravitated to investigating how black people can become forgotten when they don't fit into neat historical categories.

In one of his earliest bodies of work titled Cowboys, Reconstructing an American Myth, Gleaton made photographs and portraits of Mexican, African American, Native American, and European American cowboys. This body of work challenges a widely held vision of the United States' pioneering roots with portraits that are as carefully crafted as they are culturally revealing. In the process of working on this series Gleaton was introduced to Mexican rodeo and began traveling to and from Mexico with a group of charros (Mexican rodeo performers) from Los Angeles. Sharing an apartment with a stunt man from Churubusco Studios in Mexico City from 1982 to 1988 began a seven-year period of extensive travels in Mexico.

Two years later Gleaton established a household with the Yarahumara Indians of Northern Mexico where he began making portraits of the present day descendants of African slaves brought to what was then New Spain in the 1500s, 1600s, and 1700s. In these portraits which resulted in the exhibition Africa's Legacy in Mexico, which was extensively exhibited by the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service in the U.S. and in Mexico and Cuba by the Mexican National Council for Culture and the Arts, Gleaton had developed a style that would allow him to explore issues of cultural identity and present his own personal descriptions of beauty, family, and goodness. Regardless of the craft and care that Gleaton brings to his portraits, the basic documentary information in his work can be linked easily to some of the work Adrian Piper has produced in a directorial mode that explores the tension experienced by people who are not easily defined by rigid categories of race, gender, and class. In many of his portraits Gleaton strives to present his subjects as the epitome of beauty and grace. The best of these pictures achieve that goal in the same way that some of Lorna Simpson's work insists that universal expressions of sensuality and beauty be represented though images of people of color.

Since the invention of photography the portrait has been the medium's most ubiquitous form. Our interest in how we look and how we look at others has survived from the daguerreotype to the digital image. Gleaton's work fits squarely into that tradition. Using a medium format camera, his portraits combine the clarity found in the work of Walker Evans, the long subtle range of tone that Roy DeCarava mastered in his photographs, and the unflinching eye contact and connecting spirit that informs the work of Fazal Sheikh.

In the work in this catalogue and exhibition, Gleaton is not just providing us with photographic evidence of Africa's legacy, he is making that evidence a partner to his own personal desire of 'crafting an alternative iconography of what beauty, and family, and love, and goodness might stand for--one that is inclusive not exclusive.'

Gleaton presents his work in the style of pre-postmodern art photography. His prints are expertly crafted to extend the gray scale to its limits allowing all possible shades from black to white to be completely revealed. His prints are presented in traditional white mats in sizes ranging from 8 x 10"" to 16 x 20,"" which by today's standards seem quiet and quaint. Although his work seems to live in the past it has an urgency informed by identity politics that makes it contemporary. Many academics and scholars would like us to think that identity politics are over and done with, but current events remind us that we make assumptions and judgements and take actions against individuals based on what they look like all the time.

In producing this body of work, Gleaton didn't start out to explore specific kinds of questions about race and representation, nor did he want his work to be just elegantly crafted portraits of ethnographic study. In order to accomplish this task Gleaton walked a fine line between motivation and manipulation. His motivation was to connect with individuals with whom he shared a common story and to celebrate that bond with images of beauty and grace. To make these kinds of pictures in places where life is often hard would require a selective eye focused on his own point of view.

While Gleaton doesn't ignore that the people in his photographs appear at times to be living in circumstances less privileged than his own, he doesn't make a point of it either, because that would be a different story to tell. His story is about making connections of the human spirit based on a shared history. In every one of his pictures the feeling of connection between subject and photographer is so fully realized, so intimate and expressive that we cannot escape how powerfully Gleaton has embraced this bond.

If you saw only a few of Gleaton's photographs at one time it might be harder to recognize the bond between photographer and subject. It might be especially lost in the portraits of children, who respond to suggestions and direction more readily than adults. When making his portraits, Gleaton gives direction so that certain gestures and expressions of intimacy might only exist in the moment the shutter is released. By understanding and encouraging these moments Gleaton creates a consistency of adoration and respect throughout portraits made in many countries, cultures, and circumstances. Gleaton is not looking for a document of life. He has engaged in a process of call and response that began in Detroit and found its way through the Americas, calling out with a singular voice and hoping for a chorus in response.

Jeffrey Hoone, Director 2002

This project was made possible with the support of Light Work's Endowment Fund for Mid-Career Artists.

No one seems to be in a hurry in Tony Gleaton's photographs. There are no frenetic gestures or moments of uncomfortable tension. His photographs look like he has made the air stand still under a quiet blanket of brilliant moisture, and that his subjects have paused in the refreshment. This atmosphere of connection is a deliberate and passionate gaze that travels in a circle from subject to photographer.

Over the past several years Gleaton has been committed to exploring 'every nuance of African influence in the Americas.' With confidence that matches the ambition of this goal, his aim is to 'make my own culture look beautiful...and in doing that, I become beautiful.' In pursuit of this goal, Gleaton has documented black cowboys in the American West, fisherman in Guatemala and the daily life of residents in remote villages in Mexico. To find graceful and spirited connections in such uncommon places confirmed the importance of his efforts and renewed his urgency to bring the work to a wider audience.

In a recent exhibition at the Watts Tower Art Center in Los Angeles, his series titled Black Mexico, The African Legacy, helped highlight common bonds within the Watts community that is rapidly changing from predominately Black to mostly Latino. By celebrating and acknowledging the influence of people who are separated from any dominant group Tony Gleaton is able to locate common affinities that bind us together in the human condition. Like a mirror that shines back at us with unflinching resolve, Gleaton clearly acknowledges that the integrity of any culture is reflected in the identity of every individual.

Tony Gleaton lives in Los Angeles, CA and participated in Light Work's Artist-in-Residence program from August 15 - September 15, 1991.